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VOICES THAT ESCAPE

VOICES THAT ESCAPE

hair in the sink, trivial compared to the near Afro-worthy hair I have. But to me, this remains my little hirsute beast, having made its home on my face.

This, my friends, is the unibrow. A streak of hair that connects two separate eyebrows. And it begs the question: How coulda simple strip of hair be such a menace?

Being Pakistani-American certainly comes with its benefits. I have a lot of pride in my culture. Taking away that part of my identity would render me unrecognizable. However, my mom’s side of the family came with one other special trait — being genetically disposed to a unibrow. It’s not exactly rare among Pakistanis, but it’s particularly prevalent in my extended family. So, just like my uncle and grandfather before me, I won the genetic lottery.

The unibrow will always follow me. I never paid much attention to the eyebrows of others. It was a fact of life. An inanimate part of the body.

On a lazy middle school afternoon surfing the web, I came across a video. A song, actually: “The Stereotype Song” by Your Favorite Martian.

It was tailored for a middle school sense of humor. No one is spared, but it’s meant to ridicule stereotypes. The one little line that caught my attention? “Let’s come together and live in this world like a unibrow on an Indian girl.”

Emerging from the depths of my mind, my unibrow came alive. It was my hairy, burly, baneful little horror.

For a time, I could ignore it. Luckily for me, my unibrow hadn’t actually been brought up in conversation outside of a passing statement of fact. There wasn’t any point in addressing it.

But it didn’t go away. I realized that I was almost alone in having it. Sure, Frida Kahlo might have proudly paraded hers, but the closest thing I had to representation would be Bert from Sesame Street.

Nobody likes a unibrow.

Mainstream conceptions of how one looks at themselves are influenced by Eurocentric standards of beauty. ‘Ethnic’ features are particularly frowned upon. The unibrow is caught in that crossfire.

Even with that increase in representation, those ‘ethnic’ features are washed away. Zendaya, often lauded as an example of minority representation in media, admits that she’s Hollywood’s ‘acceptable version of a black girl’. In the end, all that’s left still has the aesthetics of white beauty, just without the white person. And that leaks into how we view ourselves. You don’t see a scruffy Pakistani kid with unibrows; rather people feel pressured to conform with very specific standards set by a white-dominated society.

Well, you do see one scruffy Pakistan kid with a unibrow: that’d just happen to be me. But I’m the exception, not the norm. And even though I’ve always accepted that about myself, it still stings to know it. I’ll never be part of the majority, the known, or the familiar. It took me a while to embrace that fact about myself. Being outside the norm seemed like a downside, but I stopped caring.

The unibrow makes me unique ly me. My buddy between eyebrows has become to me a symbol of taking on the standard of beauty in my own little way. The unibrow makes me . A person not dreading shaving day or feigning security, but a person proud of his identity.

This is a message to You. To those with crooked teeth, big noses, bushy eyebrows, large stomachs, anything deemed imperfect by society. You de serve to love your body. You deserve to love yourself, your features, and what you are as a person.

And maybe just maybe, we can learn to be a bit happier with ourselves.

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